作者: Jolande A. Zijlstra , Stefanie G. Beesems , Rob J. De Haan , Rudolph W. Koster
DOI: 10.1016/J.RESUSCITATION.2015.04.028
关键词: Medicine 、 Physical therapy 、 Mild stress 、 Bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation 、 Logistic regression 、 Computer-assisted web interviewing 、 Text message 、 Medical emergency 、 Cardiopulmonary resuscitation 、 Resuscitation 、 Automated external defibrillator
摘要: Abstract Aim We studied the short-term psychological impact and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)-related symptoms in lay rescuers performing cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) after a text message (TM)-alert for out-of-hospital-cardiac arrest, assessed which factors contribute to higher level of PTSD-related symptoms. Methods The received TM-alert simultaneously an email with link online questionnaire. analyzed all questionnaires from February 2013 until October 2014 measuring impact. interviewed by telephone first arriving bystander CPR Impact Event Scale (IES) 4–6 weeks resuscitation. IES-scores 0–8 reflected no stress, 9–25 mild, 26–43 moderate, 44–75 severe stress. A score ≥26 indicated PTSD symptomatology. Results Of alerted rescuers, 6572 completed these, 1955 responded alert 507 assisted 203 whom 189 IES. 41% perceived no/mild impact, 46% bearable 13% On IES, 81% scored 19% mild None moderate or Using multivariable logistic regression model we identified three independent on level: automated external defibrillator connected rescuer, (very) positive experience. Conclusion Lay messages, do not show CPR, even if they perceive